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COR holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024 and 2025) and a Google rating of 4.8 from 445 reviews, placing it among Bristol's most recognised neighbourhood restaurants at the ££ price point. On North Street in Bedminster, it runs a Mediterranean-inflected small-plates format with a drinks list rooted in local producers. Walk-ins are welcome at the counter; tables can be booked in advance.

North Street and the Neighbourhood Restaurant Standard
Bedminster's North Street has become one of Bristol's more reliable strips for eating well without ceremony. The area rewards the kind of restaurant that takes its food seriously but keeps its doors open — walk-ins at the counter, plates designed for sharing, a room that doesn't ask you to dress up or settle a substantial bill to justify the seat. COR, which opened in October 2022, arrived into that context and almost immediately recalibrated what a neighbourhood restaurant in this city could look like. By 2024, Michelin had awarded it a Bib Gourmand, and retained it in 2025 — recognition that sits specifically with cooking that delivers quality above its price bracket, rather than with fine-dining ambition. That distinction matters on North Street, where the competition includes casual pasta at BOX-E and the broader Modern British field anchored by Bulrush and Wilsons at higher price points.
The Room Itself
The physical space does much of the editorial work before a plate arrives. Large plate glass windows flood the interior with natural light, and the look lands somewhere between a Mediterranean trattoria and a wine bar that has accumulated too many cookery books. Shelves stacked with titles, counter stools angled toward an open kitchen, a spare white interior that avoids the design self-consciousness that afflicts a lot of newer openings: the effect is relaxed without being careless. The room can absorb a solo diner at the counter, a couple working through the small-plates list, and a table of four sharing everything , configurations that require a particular kind of spatial intelligence to pull off at this scale. That flexibility explains much of the sustained enthusiasm since opening. A Google rating of 4.8 from 445 reviews is not a figure that accumulates from a single demographic.
Small Plates and the Mediterranean Line
The small-plates format in British restaurants has had a complicated decade. What began as a credible import from Spanish and Levantine traditions became, in many hands, a way to charge tasting-menu prices without the kitchen discipline that format requires. The better versions , and COR belongs in that group , treat sharing plates as a genuine structural choice rather than a pricing mechanism. Chef-patron Mark Chapman trained at tapas-focused venues Bravas and Gambas in Bristol before opening COR with his partner Karen, and that background shows in how the menu is organised. It opens with Mediterranean anchors , boquerones, burrata , and builds toward more technically layered plates without losing the accessibility that makes the format work at the ££ price point.
Specific dishes from the database give a sense of the range. A scallop served on the shell in miso and caper butter, with crispy deep-fried roe balanced on leading, sits in the fine-dining register. A salad of chicory, fennel, blood orange and almond is described in Michelin's own notes as arriving on the plate "like a beautiful tangle of blush-hued octopus tentacles" , a phrase that signals precise composition rather than casual assembly. Handmade tagliatelle in a cavolo nero sauce with confit egg yolk, ricotta salata and lima chilli occupies the heartier middle of the menu. Slow-cooked pork cheeks, served in treviso leaves with pickled fennel, belong to the same category. These are not dishes that simplify toward comfort; they layer technique without signposting it.
Where It Sits in the Bristol Dining Scene
Bristol's Modern British scene has developed a clear gradient. At the upper end, restaurants like Bulrush and Wilsons operate at £££ and above, with tasting-menu structures and wine lists priced to match. Chef's Table and 1 York Place occupy adjacent positions. COR operates at ££ and holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand, which places it in the tier the guide reserves for value-relative-to-quality rather than absolute luxury. At the national level, that award category is shared by restaurants that punch above their price point in cities from Edinburgh to Exeter. COR's two consecutive Bib Gourmand awards (2024, 2025) indicate consistency rather than a single strong year. For comparison with the higher end of the Modern British register, venues like The Fat Duck in Bray, The Ledbury in London, L'Enclume in Cartmel, Moor Hall in Aughton, and Gidleigh Park in Chagford represent the full-format end of the spectrum. CORE by Clare Smyth and The Ritz Restaurant anchor the London Modern British category. Hand and Flowers in Marlow is the closest structural analogue , a Michelin-recognised restaurant that operates with pub-format accessibility rather than fine-dining ceremony. COR is not a pub, but the impulse is similar: serious cooking at a price and in a format that doesn't require a reason to visit.
The Drinks List
The sustainability orientation of the drinks program is unusual in that it is not decorative. Local producers anchor the list: Psychopomp gin from Bristol, Iford cider, Wiper & True craft beers from the city. The wine list draws mainly from European producers, and close to half of it is available by the glass , a practical commitment to the small-plates format, where matching individual plates to a single bottle is rarely the right approach. A by-the-glass list of this depth also signals a kitchen that expects diners to graze across a wide range of the menu rather than settle on two or three dishes.
Planning a Visit
COR is at 81 North Street, Bedminster, BS3 1ES, in south Bristol. The ££ price point means the accessible entry to the menu is genuinely accessible, not a teaser for a bill that climbs well above it. Tables can be booked; counter stools are available for walk-ins, which makes a solo visit or a spontaneous stop-in workable without advance planning. The room's Mediterranean design , light, open, visually warm , functions across lunch and dinner settings without the atmosphere depending on a full house. For a broader picture of eating, drinking, and staying in the city, our full Bristol restaurants guide, Bristol hotels guide, Bristol bars guide, Bristol wineries guide, and Bristol experiences guide cover the full range.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at COR?
The Michelin notes point to a scallop on the shell with miso and caper butter and crispy deep-fried roe as a strong opening move, along with a blood orange, chicory and fennel salad that arrives with more visual precision than the description suggests. The handmade tagliatelle with cavolo nero, confit egg yolk, ricotta salata and lima chilli is among the more substantial plates. Dessert is taken seriously: the crème caramel is specifically called out in Michelin's assessment, and the orange, nutmeg and pistachio tiramisu represents the kitchen's ability to reframe a familiar format. The by-the-glass wine list is worth working through alongside the plates rather than committing to a bottle early.
Is COR better for a quiet night or a lively one?
The room's configuration , counter stools, plate glass windows, a spare white interior , means energy levels track the number of covers rather than a deliberate atmosphere policy. At the ££ price point with a Bib Gourmand and a 4.8 Google rating, COR draws a consistent crowd, and the North Street location in Bedminster amplifies that. A quieter experience is more likely at an early sitting or mid-week. Friday and Saturday evenings will be livelier by the nature of the format and the area. Neither version requires a different approach to the menu.
Is COR child-friendly?
Small-plates format , multiple dishes arriving in sequence, designed for sharing , works reasonably well for families where children are comfortable eating across a varied menu rather than from a dedicated children's section. At ££ in Bedminster, the restaurant draws a neighbourhood crowd that spans age ranges, and the relaxed room (counter stools, no formal dress expectation, natural light) removes the formality barrier. That said, the sharing format and the menu's Mediterranean-inflected range (boquerones, miso, chilli-laced pasta) may suit older children more than very young ones. The walk-in counter option makes it easier to assess the room in person before committing.
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